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during the mid-to late 19th century. He was the patriarch of a criminal family in New York's
Seventh Ward which terrorized the New York waterfront in the post-
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The New York Tombs: Its
Secrets and Its Mysteries. Being a History of Noted Criminals, with Narratives of Their Crimes
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96:"long white whiskers and a benevolent smile, but he was one of the most cruel thugs of the Seventh Ward"
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Flaherty was considered a powerful underworld figure in his day, one of his criminal associates being
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while the oldest, leaving New York for the frontier, was sentenced to ten years in
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119:"farm houses, hen-roosts, canal boats, or anything else that came in their way"
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133:, followed him soon after. Their youngest son was sentenced to 15 years in
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River pirate and patriarch of a criminal family in New York's
Seventh Ward.
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The Gangs of New York: An
Informal History of the New York Underworld
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Sutton, Charles; James B. Mix and Samuel A. Mackeever, ed.
176:. San Francisco: A. Roman & Co., 1874. (pg. 481)
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117:. From there, they would sail upriver raiding
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195:. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1928. (pg. 77)
125:around 1874. His wife, herself a well-known
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16:For other people with the same name, see
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94:era. Flaherty was described as having
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224:Criminals from New York City
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229:Criminals from Manhattan
147:Illinois State Prison
123:Blackwell's Island
92:American Civil War
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43:Other names
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143:highway robbery
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18:Thomas Flaherty
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107:Patsy Conroy
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84:Old Flaherty
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77:Tom Flaherty
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46:Old Flaherty
27:Tom Flaherty
103:Bum Mahoney
33:Nationality
213:Categories
157:References
131:pickpocket
127:shoplifter
111:Hook Gangs
51:Occupation
139:garroting
135:Sing Sing
81:pseudonym
151:burglary
67:Children
54:Criminal
105:of the
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70:2 sons
197:ISBN
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